A — 13 ~~ — —" - on - — — n : ———— ¢ { } A - . | POOR FIDO WAS KICKED OUT| >LACE FOR FASHION HITS Femininity Anaivzed. | Keuping Child's Ears | ng SEE MiLAN : sane i & woman took infinite pains to | When there is any danger of baby’s == ~~ - | Mistress Didn't Grieve Over His Iil-| Policeman's Wife Rejoices Over His | [oveal herself to a husband or a lover ears out it is a good plan to |S * fonte, Pa ee "Bellefonte. Pa. January 19. 1912. | Mess After Learning He Was Promotion to the Fifth as she really is, he would think let him wear at night a small open Room 18 Crider’ Silly. Bellefonte, Pa., January 19, 1912, i Out of Fashion, Avenue Squad. i she Xda suffering from some incurable | work bonnet of cambric or nainsook — " . — | mental disease. A few of us indicate which will help to keep the ears flat. B. SPANGLER—Attorney-at-Law. . FARM NOTES. The late Mrs. Sue Landon Vaughan,! When it was reported that the cross | ed ate Dymeried out Lure should be taken that it is not in N or German. Ofice in Crider’s fh -- ! who originated Memorial , had al-| street policeman had been moted | » e least tight and prove uncom- Bellefonte, —~Never put ho! water directly into the | iw day Jo Jeo | piclon; but this involuntary frankness = : cream. axle grease. i —Late-hatched pullets will come in | profit in a month or so. : —A draft horse should have a large Slant Houlders and square ¢ | the average society woman's affection —You want water not quite 200 de- grees hot to scald chicks just right. —Don’t keep the colts tied up in stalls day in and day out. It will ruin the best | t. —It pays to brush the sows with a good stiff brush. Try it and see how they en- joy it. | —The colt pa have exercise while | growing, to develop it’s muscles tendons. —If too many rich table scraps are fed ! to the hens in confinement look out for | soft-shelled eggs. : —Cracks in the bottom of the rack | will swallow up more grain than the sheep | eat, and fat nothing at that. ! —A man need not be an begin poultry culture, but he more or less expert to succeed. —A reliable thermometer should al- ways be kept handy and used. Guess- work doesn’t pay when making butter. —Clover or alfalfa hay, with a light ration of wheat bran and linseed-meal and roots, is the ideal ration for the ewes. —Many dealers object to eggs with pale yolks. When you find yours are getting that way, put a little more corn in the ration. —When you buy a horse do you look at his knees? If they are all marked up, make careful inquiry as to the cause of stumbling on the road. ~—Do not give the hogs frozen swill. | Do not give them frozen or half-frozen vegetables. It will upset the stomach, cause indigestion and a loss in condition. —Eggs overwashed in water lose the beautiful fresh appearance they have when first laid. Add a bit of vinegar to the water and use as little water as pos- sible. —Remember that the colt has a small stomach, and must be fed with care and ifiteligence. A colt crammed with coarse food, lops into a pot-bellied, dyspeptic, colicky horse. —Musty hay causes cough, and throws the sheep and lambs off their feed for a day or more, then being hungry they eat too much, causing and intestinal derangement; then they drink too much | water. i to to be —When chaff or other particles get | into the oe of LR animal, Sysinge or! sponge eye uently clean, cold water containing sulphate of zinc, one grain to each ounce of water. Keep the stable darkened. that the moisture rising escaped through jhe muslin, instead of remaining in the use. —There are many days in this month when it is unfit for fowls to be outdoors. —Hilly land is especially adapted to the raising of sheep. They are almost as good as ghate for Slearitig brushy land. sheep give two good money crops SVEFY Year, one in the woo) and fhe ether in works convert into high-priced articles of food. i ve rate, hy am plants eave your i add interest and y be applied after the trees to bear. —Invi tions of the Ohio Experi- a indicate that a great per cent. of catalpa stock distributed in the has been spurious and on account of g the shortage of seed last year the prac- | tice may be expected to assume and prospective spring are warned to take ; : 7 Bie HA s=2F —Much of the success with hogs de- pends upon keeping them free from lice. | i Hs ways a great love for humanity and a | great contempt for such things as ob- —There is a great deal of humanity in | structed the free play of humanitar- fanism. “Mrs. Vaughan,” sald a Washington veteran, “regarded lap dogs as ob- structions to humanitarianism, and she had no belief in the sincerity of for her lap dog. There's a lap-dog story she often used to tell “A man—so the story runs—came down to breakfast one morning to find his wife in tears. “‘Oh,’ she sobbed, ‘what shall 1 do? Poor little Fido is ill, and the dog doc- tor says his case is serious. Oh, what will become of me if anything hap- pens to my precious little Pomeranian Fido!’ “The man comforted his wife as well as he could, and that evening he came home early in order to admmn- ister more comfort to her. “To his amazement, however, he found her, on his return, seated at the | plano, singing one of the gayest airs from ‘The Count of Luxembourg.’ “‘Why,” he stammered, ‘why, when I left home this morning Fido was ill and you were heartbroken, while now—now—"' “Strumming gayly, she glanced at him over her shoulder. “‘You see, dear,’ she said, ‘Mrs. Van Astorbilt called this afternoén, and she told me that Pomeranjans are not fashionable zany longer. Every- thing is Pekinese spaniels now. So I dried my eyes and kicked Fido out.” ALMOST LIKE A COMPLIMENT Woman of 33 Couldn't Feel Angry at Youth Who Addressed Her as “Kiddo.” Pumps are not the easiest things to keep on one's feet. A woman who was hurrying on her way to work found out that a foot can fall right out of a pump if the edg@ of a barrel stave is trod upon at the proper angle, She righted herself with a scuff and a shuffie and managed to get the shoe on again without having to relinquish all her native dignity. As she was going through the performance, how- ever, which didn’t take more than a second all told, one of those eady- mannered, sociable young striplings who abound in wholesale houses and are usually to be found on the side- walks In the capacity of shipping | clerks or stencilers, brushed by with a loud, “Hey, there, Kiddo, dontcher fal!” The girl friend who was with the pump woman looked indignant. “The idea!” she cried. “Did you hear that insolent puppy call out to you as we passed? Why are you laughing? It was most insulting, my dear. If I were only a man, I'd—" “Tut, tut, Mabel, dear. I don’t mind a bit. I suppose I ought to resent it, but—but—you noticed he called me ‘Kiddo'?” “Yes, that was the horrid part—so vulgarly impudent.” The woman smiled. “Well, you see, dear, I just couldn't reel mad at that chap. It—it—seemed sort of a—a compliment! I'll be thirty-three my next birthday!” Insurance Against Hail, Switzerland is undoubtedly one of the countries where insurance against hail has made most progress. It may be said that there is not a single can- ton where there are not some per- sons insured against this scourge of the farmer, and all the products grown in the country (cereals, fruit, veg. etables, etc.) may be guaranteed against hail risks with the national in. surance companies. The Swiss Hail Insurance company was formed as far back as 1884, and and during the 26 years that it has been in existence it has been joined by the greater number of the farmers of the country, the other company which is working this branch of insur- ance, of Neuchatel, being a local con- cern which insures only the vineyards of the neighborhood. From 1884 to 1908 about 14,000,000 francs was paid into the coffers of the Swiss com- pany in premiums, and during the same period it paid out about 10. 000,000 francs for the satisfaction of claims. In 1908 alone the premiums paid by the Swiss farmers for insur- ance against hail amounted to 1,076, 606 francs. Not What She Needed Most. “Il am sending you a thonsand kisses,” he wrote to his fair young wife who was spending her first month away from him, Two days later he received the fol- lowing telegram: “Kisses received. Landlord refuses to accept any of them on account.” Then he woke up and forwarded a check. ¢ Needed in Her Business. Madge—You seem to be enjoying your vacation. Marjorie—If I'd known there would have been so many young men to get engaged to I'd have brought along my card index system from the office. Careful Man. “When I got back from my vacation my husband had only one soiled dish for me to wash.” “Well, I guess,” said that American, to the Fifth avenue squad the police | man’s wife declared that she wag the | happiest woman in New York. | “Oh, it isn’t the salary,” she said, “nor the honor. I don’t know whether ' he will get any more money or not, | and as for the honor, he had enough | of that where he was. But the fash- | fons; just think of the hints he will pick up on them. For the last five | years I have been sick with envy of the Fifth avenue policemen’s wives ' every time I went to a policeman's ball. They looked so chic. When | asked where they got their ideas they | said i “‘Why, from my husband, of course. He is right in the center of fashion, and he takes notes and comes home and tells me things. Then when I get my clothes made up he can com- pare me with the women he sees every day and tell whether I look just right or not.’ “Now it is my turn to crow. My | husband's eye for clothes is as keen as any man's, and there won't be much In the way of style that will escape him. Oh, yes, no doubt he will be kept pretty busy managing the traffic, but you can trust him to find out how the new clothes are made, just the same.” OPIUM PROBLEM IS SERIOUS Where the Poppy Is No Longer Culti- vated in China, Bees Stop Making Honey. Some unexpected results are found from the movement against the pro- duction of opium in China. In the Yunnan, one of the provinces where opium was produced in large quanti. ties and at a low price and where a great deal of it was consumed, it ap- pears that the poppy is no longer cul- tivated, owing to the recent measures, and the poppy flelds have quite dis- appeared, according to the statements made by Doctors Talbot and Rigaud. However, this has had a disastrous ef- fect on the honey culture of the re- gion. In fact, the honey from Yunnan was renowned for its quality, but as the bees find no more flowers, the production of honey is stopped as well, The new crops which replace the poppy, such as wheat or peas, are not such as will give honey yield as well. On another side of the ques- tion, it appears that the habits of the population are not suppressed by the present legislation, as some supposed would be the case, but according to Doctor Talbot, opium-srioking is again on the increase.~Scientific American. Good Effects of Heat Wave, According to an eminent medical authority in England, who has been talking about the heat wave and its effects on the general health of the community, a shade temperature of 97 degrees is an excellent thing for a number of people provided they are strong enough to stand it. “To live for a few days in a continual state of perspiration,” said this doctor to M. A. P., “is about as good a health reviver as there is; it really induces the same result as the fasting cure, but in a better way. It clears the system thoroughly. The only draw- back to this perspiring cure is that some people find it extremely weaken- ing; those who do should take sus- taining food, but little or no meat. A glass of port wine is advisable in cases where the heat has a very low- ering effect on the vitality. I have seen a number of cases of nervous de- pression, neuralgia, and bad indiges- tion completely cured during tte last few days simply as the result of the sufferer living in Nature's Turkish bath for a few days.” Too Much for the English. I was out with a party of English and American friends the other day. We had organized a river picnic in search of sylvan glades and cool breezes. The belle of the party was a lovely young American lady, a very “Edith of the swan’s neck.” She held the audience with original portrayals of the free American woman's way of doing. A fine stalwart Briton, who saw all his protective instincts thwarted, and who wages war against the suffra- gettes, broke out at last with stern disapproval. “If you were my sister,” he observed, “I would have you shut up under lock and key.” There was an appalling pause. “that you know your sister.” The American half of the company were convulsed and 1 began to won- der if the English really lack humor. —Black and White. A Tennessee Romance. A St, Louis man went down into Tennessee the other day to freshen memories of his youth. In the course of looking up everybody he called upon an old negro mammy who is a fixture upon the place. “What's new, mammy ?” he asked. “Well, Marse Bob, they ain't no nuthin’ new ‘cept Nellie's gwin marry Lee,” she said. “That trifling nigger Lee, mammy? How did that happen?” “Ah don’ know, Marse Bob. You see, Nellie's got a home an’ a stove, an’ fall's a comin’ on. Ah ’spects that nigger Lee's jes’ fixin' to baffle the winter, Marse Bob.”—St, Louis Post. Dispatch. is generally discounted by some subtle deceit.”"—“The Dangerous Age,” by CURTIS Y. WAGNER, BROCKERHOFF MILLS, BELLEFONTE, PA. Manufacturer, Wholesaler and Retailer of Roller Flour Feed Corn Meal and Grain . i iactures and has on Jand at all times the WHITE STAR OUR BEST HIGH GRADE VICTORY PATENT FANCY PATENT T . Ginarily i rede of oprine wisest Posen aor: SPRAY be red. Also International Stock Sn Sur Te ca omaniona) Rows All kinds of Grain of bought at the office. Flour l fortable for the little sl : $14.85 which has no equal for less than $17. should i il 1 | Address all communications to Pa. to which he will Cheerfully give his prompt GUARANTEE—~The he above goods as rep- ’ < » Pl » “ » P » 4 » < ’ P « » “ > P bP tation Rubber, at 4 » 4 > 4 b 4 $ 14 : ’ The Pennsy Ivania State College. Ao Bo Al Al The Pennsylvania State College Offers Exceptional Advantages IF YOU WISH TO BECOME A Chemist An Engineer An Electrician A Scientific Farmer TUITION IS FREE TAKING EFFECT IN fied, 20 as to furnish a Ly the A Teacher A Lawyer A Physician A Journalist IN ALL COURSES. General rE ee Caucgly Mdavh The courses in Chemistry, among the very best in the and holding positions. d 1 4 Or secure a Training that will fit you well for any honorable position in life. of those who YOUNG WOMEN are admitted to all courses on the same terms as Young Men. examination or courses of study, expenses, etc.. and §5-1 VW WY TY TY WY WY UY eee For specimen papers 4 1 | for catalogue giving full information respecting positions held by graduates, address, THE REGISTRAR, State College, Centre County, Pa. Sechler & Groceries and Sechler & Bush House Block, - With the of Wi theold Standard Tea will be in SLD and Company Food Products. Company, + Bellefonte Pa, Sr — Lime and Crushed Limestone. re — H-0 Increase Your Crops H-0 Lime is the life of the soil. imestone and Lime for all purposes. AMERICAN LIME & ‘90 USE CENTRAL PENNSYLVANIA LIME Some Farmers have actually doubled their crops by use of “H. 0.” lime Drill it for quick results. If you are not getting results use “H. 0.” lime We are the largest Manufacturers of Lime in Pennsylvania. Ground Works at Bellefonte, Frankstown, Spring Meadows, Tyrone Forger and Union Furnace. Write for literature on lime. STONE COMPANY., Offices at TYRONE, PA. * | Dentists. — Dhar . E. W, LA D. D. S., office .M.C, 1.C. A, room, and CT Joya. 3t experience, ol et ESTAURANT. Bellefonte now has a First-Class Res- Meals are Served at All Hours OS ata, hr Eraaread SARSAPARILLA, SELTZER SYPHONS, ETC., for pic-nics, families and gener ally all of which C. MOERSCHBACHER, 50-32-1y. High St.. Bellefonte, Pa, ___ Pumbing, Good Health and Good Plumbing GO TOGETHER. When you have dripping steam pipes, leaky SANITARY PLUMBING is the kind we do. It’s the gukht to have, Wedon't trust no better anywhere. Sor Material and Fixtures are the Best Not acheap or inferior article in our entire establishment. And with good work and finest material, our oe Prices are lower kind work to than many who give you fy TL ARCHIBALD ALLISON, Opposite Bush House - Bellefonte, Pa. 56-14-1v. EDWARD K. RHOADS §iivhing and Commission ANTHRACITE axp BITUMINOUS COALS CORN EARS, SHELLED CORN, OATS and other grains, —— BALED HAY AND STRAW —— Builders’ and Plasterers’ Sand. KINDLING WOOD by the bunch or cord as mav suit purchasers, ' respectfully solicits the patronage of his friends and the public, at his Coal Yard, near the Pennsylvania Passenger Station. Telephone Calls: {Ent Hit orp Meat Market. Get the Best Meats. oo Sy ny by Saving weer, thin LARGEST AND FATTEST CATTLE EERE I always have ~~ DRESSED POULTRY —— 0 Jui wad vere. go P. L. BEEZER, High Street. 4334-1. Bellefonte, Pa,